1 / 7

Palaeo@Leeds 2012

Palaeo@Leeds 2012. Alan Haywood School of Earth and Environment, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK earamh@leeds.ac.uk. Content. Introduction to Palaeo@Leeds What was new for 2012 Some boring statistics Highlights: Quaternary mega fauna extinction and climate

vita
Télécharger la présentation

Palaeo@Leeds 2012

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Palaeo@Leeds 2012 Alan Haywood School of Earth and Environment, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK earamh@leeds.ac.uk

  2. Content • Introduction to Palaeo@Leeds • What was new for 2012 • Some boring statistics • Highlights: • Quaternary mega fauna extinction and climate • Cretaceous Antarctica and sea-ice (Vanessa) • Mass extinctions and climate (Yadong) • Lab/Facilities Report – Cris

  3. Palaeo@Leeds The Palaeo@Leeds Research Group is a multidisciplinary group of palaeontologists, climate modellers, and geochemists, allowing an interdisciplinary perspective to palaeoclimate and palaeoenvironments. Research interests span a range of time scales in Earth History from the Pre-Cambrian to the Quaternary. • 10 Academic Staff – including Independent Fellows • 7 PDRA’s/Fellows • 15 PhD students

  4. Breaking down discipline barriers

  5. What’s new? Rhian Rees-Owen People: Simon Poulton Chair in Biogeochemistry & Earth History Romain Guilbaud – Research Fellow Kathryn Husband – Chemical evolution of the late Proterozoic biosphere Magdalena Georgieva Jamie Lakin Edine Pape Chris Poole Caroline Prescott Rhian Rees-Owen

  6. Basic statistics... • Papers: • ~50 papers published in international science journals • 5 in the Nature-family or Science • Selected Grants: • ERC Starting Grant – “Pliocene constraints on Earth System Sensitivity” (PI Haywood) ~£1.3 million • NERC Isotope Geosciences Facilities. “Orbital climate variability during the mid-Miocene” (PI Wade). ~£20,000 • Marsden fund, New Zealand. “Surviving in the Eocene ocean: the unbearable warmness of being” (PI Hollis including Wade). ~£0.5 million. • Royal Society Research Grant "Dinosaur diets and methane emissions" £49,800. PI F. Gill, Co-I Dr Barry Lomax, University of Nottingham, named collaborator Prof. Jurgen Hummel, University of Bonn. Funded purchase of GC-MS. • Leverhulme Trust Research Grant “Investigating biogeochemical evidence for chemosymbiosis at fossil cold seeps”, £85,000. PI F. Gill, Co-Is: Dr Robert Newton, Dr Crispin Little. Funded studentship (EdinePape). • BGS BUFI Studentship – Reconstructing ocean circulation during the Neogene. £35,000. PI Haywood, Bowman, Wade and Riding (BGS). Jamie Lakin (PhD student)

  7. Basic statistics... Outreach: Fiona Gill: Royal Society funded secondment to BBC Science Unit (8 weeks). Fiona Gill, James Witts and Lyndsey Fox: Designed, managed and participated in the Palaeontological Association's contribution to the Lyme Regis Fossil Festival 2012, with an exhibit entitled "What's in a name?". Aisling Dolan: Polar Exploration station at the Leeds Science Festival

More Related